PREMIERE Google Chrome that will TOTALLY CHANGE the entire Internet

Google Chrome has implemented for the first time a function that will change the Internet as we know it, here is the plan of the Google company to make our world better.

Google Chrome http3

Google Chrome has prepared an extremely important feature that was officially launched today by Cloudflare for all users of the platform, and it will completely change the Internet. Google Chrome will have implemented the new HTTP/3 protocol, which Cloudflare launched today for websites, it being thought to increase the speed with which websites are loaded when accessed by users from all over the world.

Google Chrome benefits from HTTP/3 when it is implemented for websites, and in the case of its users, it starts running the QUIC protocol instead of TCP, the new protocol coming with many improvements. The QUIC protocol for Google Chrome was created by combining TCP with UDP, plus TLS, and this makes data transfer much faster between web servers and computers, but also much more secure thanks to much faster encryption from the start.

PREMIERE Google Chrome that will TOTALLY CHANGE the entire Internet

Google Chrome has QUIC implemented as a new standard designed to make the Internet much faster, and the acronym stands for Quick UDP Internet Connections, so it is quite clear from the name itself what it wants to bring. Google Chrome is not the only browser that has this technology implemented, those from Firefox are also testing its offering, but for now none of the browsers offer it publicly.

“HTTP/3, the next major iteration of the HTTP protocol, is getting a big boost today with support added in Cloudflare, Google Chrome and Mozilla Firefox. Initial support was added in Chrome 29 and Opera 16 and in LiteSpeed ​​servers. Chrome support expanded this month, but the bigger news is that Cloudflare is making the protocol generally available to its customers.”

Google Chrome was the first browser to have QUIC technology implemented even in beta format for users, and then those from Mozilla integrated it into the beta builds available for Firefox. Now no one can use QUIC in Google Chrome unless they install one of the Canary versions, and unless they access a website that has the standard implemented by administrators, or activated in Cloudflare.

Google Chrome has had many initiatives to improve the Internet, and HTTP/3 is the most recent of them, and it will certainly bring many benefits to the whole world.